Yes.
I'm going to go on a rant a little bit here. The universities and the K to 12s all have copyright policies. They even have copyright officers, but when we ask consistently how they are enforcing copyright, there's sort of a pause. We've been told consistently that copyright is not being enforced. They do education. If you ask them, they'll say that this is their policy—10%—just like York University. If you ask how they know someone's not doing 20% or 100%, it's sort of just a shrug, that they can't monitor that.
I'm guessing that blockchain seems like the technology that can also come up in a digital age. It would be able to track whenever a university was distributing a copy of something, then as an author, if you wanted legal recourse to sue a university you believed was infringing your copyright, that data would be available for you as evidence in a court case.